Agrippina the Elder’s menu
mensa secunda / domestic offering

Libum, cheese cake offered to the Lares

OfferingDocumented🍯 🍄facile45 min

A small, soft cake made from fresh cheese, flour, and egg, placed on bay leaves and gently baked, then drizzled with honey. It was offered to household deities before being shared—inspired by Roman domestic rites, without reproducing the sacred.

mensa secunda / domestic offering

A small, soft cake made from fresh cheese, flour, and egg, placed on bay leaves and gently baked, then drizzled with honey. It was offered to household deities before being shared—inspired by Roman domestic rites, without reproducing the sacred.

Before my household touches the meal, I never forget the gods who guard it. I have this libum kneaded—cheese, a little flour, an egg—and I place it on bay leaves, as my mother taught me. When I brought my Germanicus' ashes to Augustus' tomb, it was still with such offerings that I honored his shade. The honey flows over it: what is sweet to the gods is afterwards sweet to the living.
Agrippina the Elder
Ingredients
  • Fresh cheesetwo pounds (base)
  • Wheat flourone pound (structure)
  • Eggone (binder)
  • Bay leavesa few (fragrant support)
  • Honeyfor drizzling (final sweetness)
How it was made : Cato the Elder gives the exact recipe for libum in De Agri Cultura: pounded cheese, flour, one egg, slow cooking under a clay cover (testum) on bay leaves. It was a ritual offering to household gods, later consumed by the household.
Sources : Cato the Elder, De Agri Cultura, 75 (libum)